Will it? I wanna try it out but im afraid that the adaptor, the appliance or the socket itself will explode an electricute someone.|||If a rated fuse precedes the circuit chances are it will blow out and appliance may be saved. If no such protection is provided, some component or transformer will begin heating due to over current (you may still save save the appliance from total burnout by disconnecting it, though this cannot guaranteedeed) and burnout. There may not be any explosion, though surely the appliance will burn out.
Advice: Don't do it . If you are not sure never, never try any experiment with electrical appliances.|||It depends on the type of circuitry of the appliance.
If its power supply stage has got a good voltage regulator, adequately heatsinked, the appliance would become warmer than usual, but with no damage.
If this is not the case, the outcome depends on the voltage tolerance of all the electronic components included in the appliance. If the tolerance is low, the appliance will be damaged in a time variable upon the tolerance width.
Because a large part of electronic appliances is produced in China with low quality parts and poor schematics to reduce costs to a minimum, the chance of destruction of the appliance is considerably high.
Better not try it.
Go for the right power adapter.|||It will not explode. If it is low voltage it will get hot and then melt. It will not explode.
If your mission is experimental you should try it to test the tolerance of the equipment. If your mission is to bypass a safety that an electrical engineer has designed into the product, you should stick with spec.|||It will not explode, if sensitive to input voltage get damaged in due course.|||I agree, but to add the 12v plug should not fit into the 9v anyway. Buy the right adaptor.|||probably won't explode but if it hase a motor it will run faster and burn out. if your talking about a cell phone don't do it
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment